Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1871 — Page 2

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THE EVEXING NEWS. t'*>, than someo/ the AttoHM*y’splages,

| bnt it {xj»*?esteh the very serious defect of | not i>eing true. Prof. Head did no more than Robert Dale Owen or Judge Pettit I in the constitutional convention, for the common schools, and neither of them

JO UK H. HOLLIDAY, rcsLmtKK Aim raorancroa.

VIEhNEBDAY. JULY 5, 1S7L

Thjk KvisuMi W*w* » rcauitftEij rvKxr week'; “founded’'the svstem. That a*a» done DArAcrEaiKM>» I aUouroctock.«ta>eofli < -e > «tmtb- wben the congr^sionai township fund west comer of Meridian »nU Clnicnreet^ ( ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ sinkfng | Two C£Jfm | Fund was established, long before the SCBSUBIPTTOISS: J Convention of 1850 met. That body apSobscrfben wrTrf^anJeniaanj part of the ! pjj^ the ^ ftinds set them to work, bnt all j

it <x*nld have done would have been little without the money that had been gathering for thirty-four years. The superstructure was long in building, bnt the founda-

Mo ADTjurruuurn /ssketko am lumatiAt mat- tions were laid l>efore Pud. Rea* had himtul «eH left school, if not l>efore he was born.

Tlte man who merely puts a power in mo-

Tiie Old School Boanl seem to be satis- tion is not the fountlerof what it achieves.

cUy »t ten cents per week.

Bnbeerfber* terved by mail, one copy one month -• 50 One copy tor three naoDth*. 1 25 One copy tear one year.— .... 5 00

bed with the opinion of the law firm they consulted the other day, and have passed their authority over to the new one. Judge Gregory, ill a card published yesterday morning, says that his opinidh, to which we alluteiJ day Wfore yesterday, affected only the seventh wn tion, and not the body of the law , and does not conflict

w ith that U our law yers.

J)k. Co*. w»id in reply to a qtteslirm from sotte member of the Cify Council, at the last meeting, that more than two millions rf dollars had l»een invoked in Clay county in consequence of the know ledge obtikned and diffused of the mineral rosoivces of that region, through the great ’‘“Htcnreion.” We take it for granted Uktt the Ihx*tor is sure/»f liis figures, and if he. is, t hat noted expeditidh was aland as judicious an investment of the cash as could have been made. **11 sometimes pays to “throw money aw^y,” w hen it is

thrown in the right direction.

The Sentinel yesterday morning copied, with comments not particularly flattering to the author or subject, a column or near it, of a letter of Miss Tsuira Renin to the New York Sun on Henator Morton. It was a very laudatory affair, and written, ns we fancy all of Miss Ream’s letters are written, in a spirit of universal kimlnusfy hutfi{|HUf In mbit i< m getet> the i>oiiit of teilifig ur how'.the ^‘fmtor’s*.original name, thill cojj/erie'l byjiis parents; was

Oliver UiUtziuad^em' Tliyock Morton, it imprdgjp* Atuei w ith p sli^ti^d^icrous suggestion, nail srsente.of poB^pf* antio.v-

nnce to the /ong turned gent lent art who took the soi|Hibf»*.Rbertf oi^ecjiriatening himself bg # diV)pping hidf oLllm burdensome patronymic. ^ fP

S "T * T-

The City Copncil have been at last persuaded, by strong •pbtitjons, to appropriate $1,000 for the benefit of the approaching meeting of the Scion tide Association. In thi^ they have l»een consistent, at least. ttmTabout the hardest argument they had to resist was the allusion to the former appropriation to the Fair. It would Ik* hunt to'say why a thousand dollars should not be given to the cultivation of science wRen five times as much is given to what is httlo better than a very attractive show. We believe, as we have said before, that the Council shpahl not have set tlie precedent of such appropriations; but having set it in a ease of no considerable merit, it was well follow it in a better ease altogether. With a city tax of one and a third per cent, a little economy became judicious, even if it fell legitimately within the power of the Council to use money for any but strictly municipal purposes, as

it does not. -

any more than an engineer is the creator of a boat’s motion. Mr. Hanna ran off iij a wild strain of eulogy, that whatever it J. did for the feelings of its author and object. did serious violence to the facts. It is always a little risky to leave these fiery' young fellows, like Mr. Hanna, to deal w ith cases of delicate, personal relations to history. They are so resolutely bound “to make a sijioon or sjH)il a horn,” aftd so very apt not to make,a spoon.

A “Kala of Frog*" in Arizona.

The phenomenon familiarly' known as the “min of frOgs” has been ridiculed and contradicted by certain sdentists: nevertheless, there is abundant proof to show that it has - occurred, and probably will again. In 1804, the writer, in company with some fifty other traWllere,;had personal experience of the fact. We were in Arizona, no less than twenty miles from arty stream, pond or wat<h\ The day was extremely sultry', mid we had halted to let the animals graze and rest for an hour or two. Not a living thing Insides ourselves and horses was in sight, and certainly no frogs were hopping over the rich, tufted gramme-grass, w hich covered the ground for miles in every direction. Suddenly a dense black cloud made its appearance, and it soon l>egan to disrlmrgf a copious rain upon our unsheltered headk The drops were very

large ami the Water quite warm.

.Nearly every jxwson wore abroad-brimmed ►felt hat, which proved a protection against tin* rain as well as again?! the sum. Our attention was soon arrested by the pelting of some tiling which'St ruck our hats like hail, hut which proved to lx* frogs, and in less than two minutes the grass w.as fairly alive with those creatures. &vera! of the jiarty tofik some from their hat-rims. Onr unexjiected visitors were all of one size, aliout a quarterAf.an inch long from nose to romp, very lively, and apparently in the best condition. Their fall bad been broken by the springy, resilient nature of the grass. *It is not probable that several hundred thousand, perhniis millions, of frogs had suddenly been hutched into life in the ground by the rain, or, if tH$y had, that pi their infantile glee they jumped five feef cleven inches from the earth to the top of oar heads merely to show how the game of leapfrog should be played; Nor hud they any such caudal appendages as

are generally attached to juvenile raua.

They came from above, in company with the rain: and this fact was made clear bv holding out the hand and seeing them fall upon it. as well as'finding them on our hat runs. The eggs from which these reptiles sprung, had undoubtedly been drawn up into the atmosphere by a water-spout, and held in suspension with aqueous particles long enough tp hatch them out and give, them perfect form; then, by the force of mu-l tmil attraction, the separated particles of vapor got together in such masses as to form heavy sheets of water, which, in turn, became amenable to the law of attraction of

A L ttle too Strong.

F.ulbgies on forgotten men, or unappreciated men, are pleasant things to see, f «nd doubtless pleasant things to make, but thcfe is a lit tie risk where there is not a general pubHc know ledge of a man’s acts or BKosition.ofoverdoing the£hing, and letting a generous ardor rim away with justice. Mr. Attorney General Hanna illustrates this truth in" his recent address to the lit entry societies of Columbia, Missouri,.published in full by the Sentinel, and q as well w orth its space as the matte generally appears there. Its st^Ie^ t idedly ornate w ith a fondness for __ pitor and the embroideries of speech tSa really seems to be peculiar to the Oth District, and to the Democratic oratory* of that District. Mr. Yoorhees is probably Ix'tter known to $li» literary taste of the West for his fearful offenses against it, than he is to the politics of the West for Iris wild vagaries during the wsjr, while Mr. Hanna is getting well ahead in the path w hich will lead him to the reputation of Edward S. Tenny sooner than his . best arguments will land him, in the ranks with T. A. Howard or James Morrison. But it must lie conceded that he has a long way to pull before he can measure

, the wooden swords of foolery with his

tow dsmaii. What we care to look at now. however, is less his style than Iris statements. He sa}’* of Prof. Daniel Read, ohoe of the State rnivereity of this State, ami a member of Constitutional Convention of 1850: “He was the founder of the “ system by which mV own cherished “ Commonwealth has at this time the ** largest common school fund, in projior- “ tion to her population, of any of the “ States of the Union. His measures ami ‘ a^juments in the Convention which ** framed the existing Constitution of In- “ diana gave out State its present great V perpetual source of enlightenment for “ all the people. 1 am more than justi- “ tied in making my grateful tnrknowledge- “ mentii to him to-day for those benefits “conferred, which will extend togenera- ’“ tion after generation. When the white fronts of time have fallen thickly upon

M , ‘ l

w&jfm;,-

his head, when his work is done, when “ he go*w to seek rest from his labors. “ therp is none that will support his two- “ ken ami tottering frame with more gen- • “ tie and affectionate hand than the child

I* tie and affectionate hand than *t of the common School of Indiana.”

gravitation, returning to the earth from whence it had been drawn. In the fall new divisions were crested, ‘‘drops” among which the frogs descended, having been, obedient to simitar forces, moving with the aqueous particles. This instance is cited to show that other things besides vapor are translated from earth to atmosphere oy certain well-known and accredited developments of natural laws.—[From “Aerolites,” in the July Overland Monthly. An Artist's Error Corrected by a Fan-

non ball.

: In the midst of the smoking mins of Paris there rises, where the hostile once stood,a triumphal and funeral column, a monument commemorative of the revolution of July, 1830. On the bronze shaft raised in honor of the insurrection, names are inscribed, and those who bear them have most of them since figured, sword in hand, in the outbreaks which have sullied the capital of Franc#. Who knows, if search were made, that some of them might not be found among those white headed ruffians who were to be seen yesterday passing down the boulevard. and who had been taken with their hands blackened with powder and petroleum. It is, at any rate, the same race, if not the same generation; they are the heirs of those “heroes of July,” themselves sons and heirs of the “heroes of the bastile,” •who liave maintained the same contests, committed the same crimes, for the same reason—rebelled against the law. On the top of this column shines a gilded figure, a solemn protest against the law in favor of rebellion. Balanced upon one foot, like the god of thieves, this figure represents the “genius of liberty.”’ From the uplifted leg and the extended left arm, hang the links of a broken chain. The artist has placed on the forehead a shining star, the symbol of Intelligence, and in the right hand a torch to set fire to the world. A shell, in the last revolution cut off the star with the head of the figure; the torch alone remained. This revolutionary cannon ball corrected the work of the sculptor, and reduced it to its proper signification—a monster without intelligence, carrying devastation before it. It is thus that the- punished monument should remain henceforth, a his tom pillory, a monumental condemnation of Uui spirit of rebellion. What-

ever ma;

[ination of the snirtlof rehulhon. \Y hatay be the definite government given to

France, it will do well to respect this eloquent Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Rouis. testimony to revolutionary folly, and to T . ~

have it as art example to future general The men of the Commune had condemn to perish; they had charged with po' the vaults which extend under the ed In their hurried retreat they had no time to complete their work of destruction, aud it must be a matter of regret to those who have survived their defeat, to think that this faithful image of their blindness and of their in

recollect tons of posterity.-

9f London Times.

[Correspondence

The Trade in ttlaas U«nm1h,

The decrease in the demand for glass goods, together with the yery hqaxy stock* made up under the excitement of a strong manufacturing’competition, say» the Boston Commercial Bulletin, has brought several of our largest Western factories to a stand-still, and most all of them have hanked from one-thin! to two-thirds of their furnaces; and they all purpose to cease dealing entirely as soon as their present orders on specialties shall have been tilled. A11-4he manufacturers of lampchimneys in New York ceased to work on the 17th insh, and they have now stocks enough made up and unused to fully supply the coining fall demand. By the action of the Glass Convention early in the spring, it was hoped that the present crisis would lutvc been

avoided. The competition between the Sastern and Wester** blowers, seeking Yo control the trade at large, has given to consumers and dealers glass gomls at a mere nominal margin above the cost The present condition may lead to a general stoppage for two or three months of all the glass companies; and to effect this result a convention will be called at an early day to meet In New York.

Time. Through mists thai hang over the Past No mortal fife story can trace; He sit* ou a mTsiical throne. The first aiuf flic last of (us race. No jewel* shine bright on hi* crown. And mutely he reigns as of okl; Hi* archives by angels are kept. Which no human eye can behold. When Earth was a planet of fire. In wonder he node on the storm. And gazed at the red tlamtnjr tail Ere matter was moulded to form. Amid the dread deluge of fire He saw the huge mountains arise, Until their bleak nxmmits were km In the white-rolling clouds of tire skies. Vrhen Xntnre wsy writhing in min. And struggling as if to he free. - He *aw roaring hlikrws shrink tsu-k. And island* k-aj) out of the -e.i. When flames their wffal furv hail sjs-nt. And left hare the crest of the globe. He saw smiling Nature look glad. And graced with an emerald rolre. From chaos he saw beauty spring. And order march forth in its train; But to find out the date of his birth , Man's effort* are futile and vain. The keen eye of man fails to pierce The 1*11 and the blacknev* of night. And Science get*, wildered and lost. In search of the truth-guiding light. The -s-holar may boast of his lore. The Sophist ami wrangler may rave. But rocks and volcanoes are dumb. And fossils are mute as the grave. Old time has seen symbols and creeds And races of men swepr-awa> : While the earth was suioking with blond, And strewn with the wiararhf decay. Let builders build temple* of stone. Boiiud strongly with iron and brass; Their years may be thousand.*, yet they •Shall into forgetfulness pass. The sage may Ire led by the truth— The light only known to the few; But no seer the veil can withdraw That hides the dark future from view.

LIPPIKCOTT,

J- If

Carriage Manufacturing Company,

I ware. The berries Were grown on seventy !o ■ A W A acres of land. tSe largest yield on arty one ^ | acre lieing U^>1S quans. and the lowest about

iouo. ' *

Glover, theJBoylston bank robber. is«tffe - { ing one of the \*enalties of fanie. He writes from tlie Boston jail to a New York paper: ! •But tortile protection of the Sheriff, who has interfered to rare rne from persecution, I should be run to death by detectives, inter- V v/ ^ f

viewers and other bloodhounds.”

The largest driving band ever made of leather has just been turned out by Joseph Gates A Sons, of Lowell. Massachusetts. This immense belt measures twa hundred feet in \

length and seven feet in with. It is to be Builli every style of used for driving the machinery of a large saw j fixe CARRIAGES & BUGGIES.

mill on the St. Lawrence, near to Ogdens- i

burg. —— . > Among other results of the war, not the I Dealers In . least important is a remark;ride increase of _ A . .. , cotton manufacturing in the South. The i ^ P . *****

factory at Augusta, Georgia, it is said, has paid a profit of twenty per cent, a year from the" start, apd a new one with a thousand looms is talked of. The President of the Augusta company claims that cotton can Ire manufactured ten per cent, cheaper there

D. X. 8XYDKS,

“SCRAI>S.” Kentucky has 1,024 practicing attorneys. Remington, the rifle man, is a Methodist. Mobile exports more oranges than Messina. A fifteen-foot snake terrifies Alexandria. Va. "Moniicelto, Florida, has a century plant in bloom.

New York has three negroes of .Scotch nativity. Pensacola, Florida, has had two crops of straw Irerries. Manilla, Alabama, produces a one-pound ten-ounce tomato. St. Joseph, Missouri, is to have her bridge by November 1, 1872. Iginmstcr, Pennsylvania, is subject to Diagnothian Reunions. TtfentyVour graduates of Brown Uni versify have died since commencement, 1870. Bismarck has the table on which the preliminaries of peace were signed at Versailles. The NowfYork Tribune is down on tlie everlasting Mansard roof for houses, barns and factories. The gambling thieves of Kansas, City, Mo., do their business “on the square”—the pubHc square. (ten. R. E. I^ee’s famous war horse ‘‘Traveller," died of lockjaw at Lexington, Va., last Monday. Fashionable Detroiters make their bridal tours on the ferry-boats. Time, seven minutes and a half. Two weeks ago the Indians captured a herd of one thousand cattle on the Concho and killed two men. “The Coroner and undertakers smile blandly at the green fruit sold at the corner stands,” in Washington. Columbia, Tennessee, is to have a reservoir on Mount Parnassas, from which the city will receive a supply of water.. General John A. Dix and Azariah C. Flagg are the sole relics of the Albany Regency, since the death of Edwin Crosswell. John H. Larmore, aged ninety, lately walked from his home to Wheeling, West Virginia, a distance of forty miles, In one

day,

Alabama papers giye a report that an early special session of the Legislature is probable; to consider the financial condition of the State. v * A monument is being erected at Fort Niagara to the memory of eight men who were drowned in the Niagara river on the 4th of

May laft.

The college commencements have faded into air, into thin air, and the potato-bug resumes his ancient solitary reign.—[Chicago

Republican.

A Southern paper says New York has twenty-nine'miles of water front, but “not a single alligator,” and disgustedly adds, “Who

would live in Ne* York.” /

The artesian well at Sheridan, in Kendall county, Illinois, on the Fox River Valley Railroad, has bean sunk 85o feet, and flows

10 000 gallops of water daily.

Four thousand dollars liave been subscribed toward the proposed statue to Fitz Greene Halleck in the Central Park. Double

that amount is still required.

'■sir -

The present population of London exceeds, the combined populations of New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Brooklyn, Baltimore,

than in New England. Mr. Botts, of North Carolina, tamed an alligator six yards long, and started in the show business. 'While exhibiting the power of kindness to tame the most savage saurian, The alligator gently closed his jaws. Mr. Botts s legs were buried in a soap-box, but l>efore they could secure a bushel of emetic the majority of him was inwardly digested, and Ids widow now supports herself in modest comfort by showing the stuffed skin of tin

gigantic lizard.

\ Maaaini ou the UominnniHtm In an article on “The Commune and the Assembly,” in the Roma del Poinrio, Mazxini

writes;

“The orrfe of fury, of vengeance, and blood, of which Paris has .offered the spectacle to the world, would fill our toul with despair if we had merely an opinion and not a faith. A people which wallows about as if drunk, raging against itself with its teeth and lacerating its limbs, while howling triumphal cries; which dances an infernal dance Ire fore fine grave it lias dug with its own hands; which kills, tortures, burns, committing crimes without sense, aim, or hope; which vociferates like the fool, who sets lire to his own pile before’the eyes of the foreign foe against whom it did hot -know hovr

to fight—such a people puts ns in mind of some «f the most horrid visions of Dante’s hell.” “Tire doings of lioth parties In France,” Mazzini says, “are marked by an Trokese ferocity,’ by an insane bloodthirsti•uess more characteristic of wild beasts than ‘ of‘men.” He condemns in the strongest terms the acts of tlie Commune which, “based on no principle of patriotism, or of humanity, shot the hostages in cold blood. When their deatli could not possibly have served the cause of the Commune; and threw Uie_ torch into edifices tbaLaja itoi ancient glory of the Town." M5zzmi believes that-it is the duty of tlte Italian Republicans to “He pa rate themselves from both French parties, lest the moral sense of his countrymen should sufl'er the same degradations as in France.” A Fiendish Trick. A colored boy ten or twelve years old, in Wilmington, y. C., on Thursday last, caught a little child two years old, ofCapt. Woodford, which was playing in front of its father’s house, and forced down its throat a considerable quantity of kerosene oil from a can which be wiis carrying. The baby was rejiorted as suffering terribly, swollen, its mouth in horrible condition, and not expec-

ted to survive.

Tlie Comptroller of Georgia reports that the State last year rtScreased more in the value of its property than in any previous year in its history. This increase is ~sti-

oiated at $20,000,000.

^ The hair of Yarlin, the Finance Minister of the Commune, turned from the deepest

famy. will recall tire columnne.of 1871 to the black to a snowy white in the brief period n U nard Line Anchor Line

between his conviction and execution

died with great courage.

He “could carve a ny*n qut of an old cbecap, And grie him brains that would Itt^ much more active than the small amount of dead matter which lies under the two inch skull of the editor referred to.” A Tfoy ed-

itor

A grand industrial exhibition takes plqpe at Moscow in 1872, to commemorate the two hundredth aebui versary of the birth of Peter the Great The boot which he bulk with hb own hands will be shown in tlie naval department. . / **" One of the Siamese Twins is lying at the point of .death, at their home in North Carolina. The other is in good health. In anticipation of death, arrangnrents have been made for the immedftite ^paration of the living from the dead brother. It is estimated that $34,000 was received for strawberrife by farmers living within a radius of five or six miles of Smyrna, Dela-

Xm. 26,28,30, 22 aal 24 K. fiftrgta S!„

•fWThi? most complete assortment in the West— always ous&le at the Lowest Cash Prices,.

UKH. X ATI’ VS KUCBAU.

toe. A. HOOK*. ■NYr»EK, K1

id, Nc

IN INDIANA

A MOOHE,

»nd Real Estate Bjoker«,

mULALlj

k, Bond, Note and Beal Estate Bro

DU&KKS IN INDIANA

Wtegive,' s of Ban

No. 16 Sentinel Bull.

**—~

ittention to stock*.''

KES, Money t^oan

tion tele

ties corpo-

other

^aicreraa woi^i t*,™ ^

000 and upward. £ , are Agent* forAife and Rre Insurance Com raakiag «p>ng the best in ^ United

J WILUB W. WWOl t>We. Nc

WRIHHT,

Fort Richnaontl. After fifteen years’ work and the expenditure of nearly $2,000,000, Fort Richmond, near the light house at the entrance of the Narrows in New York harbor, is at last about completed, hut it is likely to be condemned by the Board of Examiners,op utterly useless except for soldiers' quarters, and its guns will therefore probably be dismounted.

NA*»P A YORK’S COWniNEDFEET- _ ING AM* FEAT IKON.

. /Y‘ • '

/ «' * j Answers equaliy-well for either pur])ase, and is arranted U> do Fluting as nicely as any machine i the markot. . For agencies or lease of territory, apply to GREGORY, SPRINGER A CO., f*rop’rs, * Second floor Vinton’s Block, oppFost Oflice.

•^Agents wanted.

n o sat, wed,rat

Steamship Agency, No. 5 Odd Fellows Haix» INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA^ .

Representing the following lines of Steamships:

National

Line, North German Lloyd, William*

ft Guiona Lino, Sailing from and to

New York and Baltimore,

Liverpool,

' nuts iiriiran

Glaa^>w,

Hamburg, etc.

DRAFTS,

Payable at any dty in Europe, issned at the lowest

rate*.

COLLECTIONS AND CUV IMS In Europe promptly collected.

RAILROAD PASSES

From anvoHtreKastera dries issued at the regular

VST ^ W NEURALGIA, ^ / £-# Nrrwtu HtwUeh* aad

Kervou* Tuothoch*,

\ ®" ri * fuft * * i* «t a»j rtattiMurra. ^ BROWNING 1 SLOAN,

IFCIiiAMUA ^ hnino or other pels. e nervous system. It

purely a nerve tonic and sedative, re» combineti as u, quid and strengthen the nerves, and through them, the whole system. * ’ Pittsboro. two., April 1.1*71. I certify that in tlie fall of 18051 had a most violent attack of neuralgia, widt h lasted several dap, and all remedies tailed to relieve it, till I took Tilton’s Neuralgic Pill, which cured mo in a few hours ap perfectly, that I have not had a twinge of the disease since. W. II. MILAM.

XJOR SALE BY UGRNKR A CO., r 85 E. WA*UI NGTOJt 8t., One house of 5 rooms. North Mississippi street ; price. *2,300. One frame house of 9 reoms, and good lot, ou South street: price, *'>.000—a bargain. Two lots northwest part of city, 8;J00 each. i One nice lying lot southeast, S250. One lot on Jones street, *200. Farm near Irvington at &UX> per acre. V Beaulifnl farm 28 miles from city-

BriLDEKH

Dealers in Dressad Lumber. - '%L«' 'AaLv-' ’ JBfe' v i Having taken the management of the v ". >.• % 7 ’ -i f \ • vv% ”■' w r ; INDIANAPOLIS WAG0H and AGBldtlLTUlLAL W0RIS

No. 172 South I^mhessse Street,

r

We have introdrt'ced enfirelv new and improved PLANING, FLOORING, RE-SAWING ami WEATHERBOARD Machinery*and are now prepared to <10 ail kinds of work in onr line at the shortest notice and in the most workmanlike manner. Hating the largest Planer in the city, we eaa dress lumber ten (10) incites thick by twenty-eight (28) inches

wide.

We will continue the- Wagon and Agricultural branch of our Works, and are prepared to supply the Trade \vith 4 FINISHED WAGONS, WAGON GEARING, WHEELS, ^WHEELBARROWS, RAILROAD BARROWS, RQAD SCRAPERS, CARTS, MARROWS, And WAGON MATERIAL turned and sawed at lowest rates, arid (wire by close attention to business, and the superior quality of our work, to merit the patronage of all concerned. JOHN J. DUMONT, 7 . Superintendent

If witk B.

^HANtiE OF FI KM. Jno. E. Ci.eland has associ

W. Cathcabt in the B<gja and Stationery business. The new firm will be constantly ready ‘o meet the demands of the Trade with an enlarged stock of Medical and Miscellaneous Rooks, Stationery, etc.

iated himse 1 Stationery

CATHCART 4 CLELAND,- . f Successors to ' R. W. Cathcart. 26 East Washington St

^NDIANAPOLIH TOBACCO WOJtKS.

SMITH & V^.

| Manufactures of

FLTJ.O- TOBjLjScO difflae. No. 85 E. South St, Indianapolis,

^ «. riEAJiiitN. jjK

Birr,

Notary Publio,

I^pfftariro. loo Washington Ht.,

Corker of Delawarx > -

Thla total Otmotrod l>ally.

’ * - —* ' - •

FOR TRADE—A ffood frame cottage of 5 room*, IttMmSFs isjs , * mJ,p * 4o,3S

8 rooms, cellar . with two largo

terms. A decided bargain.

FOR TRAI'E—A neat cottage of 8 well, etc., all new and eompleta- 1

lots m the fashionable up town part of the City, worth about 16,000, Will trade for a smaller property and take *600 down, tire balance on long time. CENTRAL RESIDENCE PROPERTY- Frame cote

throughout, • * ‘ with-

"A fine brick housl rif c rooms, and « cellar; well, and cistern. Price $d,500 - oi

Abm Washington street

' A flue <>ue story house on Greer street, :t rooms, lot well set fruit trees, etc. Price fliitS). Cheap.

a? and *2,

To re;

ry brick home on South Delaware *1,000; vacam loti from *2*0 to $600

I^OZAKT DA^L BIEEIARP KOOH. THE FINEST AND *MOST FASHIONABf.E RESORT IN THE CITY. * WILL BinBBBIQ, Proprietor. »

-llAj

>toxra, lieu.

a “

rtf;

PHYSICIAN 4ND SDRGE^

A OFFtrti: ’ _ No. 21 Virginia avenue. No. 3721N? 1 ;,INDIANA^0^8. INDIANA.

kh|»«N( ^N.'New

Jeraqyat

J )*w. OLJYEK A BOYNTON. Office—58K East Market street ■ «—1 ’■ - . A#-.-.., ,

J A. COMINttOl Office—No. 36 North Del RrairtENCK—335 North Lit

V^OMETMING NEW. A NOVELTY AND aTegEASITY. TUCKER’S*

silling tong at me uesa or Mime, s sieiaus recommend iA t^U and i Washington street » ’

i it at Not

j^AISOH BOBEE, 44 WEST. WASHINGTON STREET.

The

_ louder supplied with the choicest delicactei of the sdtaoft. ‘The i*est of Wines, Liquors and <3ears’disjamstsl at foe bar. Tlte cuisine and other anaugcmcuLs of the establishment are the most (X re..E-~.--v, Watt SIMON McCAKTY.

Proprietor.

■jkr—-r i u jC* m s •

Dealers wifi find a choice selection of brands of CLEAR SEED AND HAVANA CIGARS,

rjlHE EAKOEtST OR41HBSTMOH In the rity ■A.t the VoIIcm Glarden. ■W Will play every day and evening. JOHN BALDUS.

tales at;

ALEX. METZGER, No. 5 O.tTT'eiiows Hall.

solutely necessary. Strict investimtion this to be a splendid investment. I tu ,i T IfoWHt.wib^on'rtmt

HAYWOOD * to., MautrfaoDircrs of Parent Artificial Limbs. limbs fiHOIsbed to rtffleen. and soldier* and tnmsportaUou free of -'S twtes made ( and gentiemenfcrutohca* Peg etc., etc. ’jg . c No. 1^8 X, Wa«hin*tOB Bt., indianApolis, IND. i

HENKTH, >Mt^nufaetnrerand WholesaleDealagin

SAj^p

21 Norifi Del

H

'ARE, Ew.

owottte Oartrt Hon**, INDIANATOU8, IND

^ATTEBSOS dk KEEmT

% Dealer* ia/*

^F ^ S^ond-hand Fturitore, Stoves. Ete. y” 0 ’ klBd * <W Onm,.

Goods.

. IT.

tUt’oZHpi'idtf SZu 1

only whip nutritious.

w-fcrfrU right to

tora. vheap iiuiUtions. Be sure youmt ft? ?sw2 SPtSK tSREZ'JtgIZS

TRY theiv^ mot,tnV tut m dkm Tk* to towpsriaiv f CliTS ^ txxt »wlMi MivbrHiwf iUk&t <1 60UAR »f»t ^rw«ra« Sir ; ^anamst No. 70 North lihiHkie Da

..... ^ T ~,j|Lr a farm erf about Ih# asse value; cither in Marlon, Morgan, or Hendrick* county pnJarred. 1 FQR EXCHANGE—Wc have a new frathejeottaea of 4 rooms, rellar. well, etc., hr thexK.rthcast mut of the city, to exchange for property in fire south gagerfteerifcL and pay cad! ditffcrence If any. A DESIRABLE BRICK RKUDENCK.'within 2 square* of the post Office, 10 or H rooms, j aiwred, and giu tlirougbout, Willi laith room and ail netaitsl conveniences; gcaxl K»t. ea>t front, v an to-had for less tliau Us worth, on fast payment* ITii-e,

fto.OiW

SOME VERY DESIRABLE HOUSES AND LOTS in the north part of the city. One hotoe of 9 for 10 room*, for Ifitea 8300 down balance in eight years;

it is chqap. Call and,see us.

VACANT LOT ON VINE STREET-An $«01ot (WUh aurae filling, ' for This is a ton gain— •» want cash for It; It will sell very soon. StfSAM FLOURING MILL—Brick building with slate roof, thvae run at stones, itt-honre p wer en* gine, 30 ft. bolRC double fluod. ail in the most complete onler; has a No..l custom trade, in a live railroad town within 30 feet of the depot side track, in one of the best wheat counties hi the Stale; threa acres of town lots thrown in at |7„ r >00, and on easy

P O R BALE.

A house of ihrei’ rooms, on monthly pnvment*. 85,000 of bank stock to trade for real estate. From 185,000to SAO.OtH) of steak in mle ’of the best (Aylng inaciiine work business, for .sale or trade

lor red estate. ’ ...

A nnnibt'r one bargainjn a lions*' ami ha .Nfirtii-

uast, of 8 rooms etc 1 ., *i,ti00. A itnek cottage Southeast,

feet square, time $1,800. UlU'ap.

"A fine brick house’rif C

4 rooms, and a lot 105

fine porch,

only 4 squares

Jcsk^yoom in one of iho to st office* in

^tented/ a good servant girl with rceomtnenda-

JAME8 FRANK,

ll ^ No. 85>^ East Washington street, ^ ' In Gramling’s Building

r J

pAAC H. HERRIN6TOH, Manufacturer of and Dealer In il-A.:R,:Er:ESS, SA.IDX)XiHS, BRIDLES, COLLARS, WHIPS, Etc. ■ WFAll kinds of Repairing done on short notioo, « 15* W. Washington Stbeft, . * INDIA1VAPOLIB,

V

A. T. KEKD. J. J. BOTUk ^ REEDACO.,

Manufacturers of

Mineral, Soda and Seltzer Water, A specialty made of charging Fountains by

steam.

ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY [ATTENDED [TO.

28*N. West Street, JtBT X>XA.1Va.T^01

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